1 / 61

Slavery and Western Expansion

Slavery and Western Expansion. Impact of War w/Mexico. Heightened sectional tensions Opened new lands to the issue of slavery CURRENT LAW – MISSOURI COMPROMISE Southerners wanted new laws to help return runaway slaves

maalik
Télécharger la présentation

Slavery and Western Expansion

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Slavery and Western Expansion

  2. Impact of War w/Mexico • Heightened sectional tensions • Opened new lands to the issue of slavery • CURRENT LAW – MISSOURI COMPROMISE • Southerners wanted new laws to help return runaway slaves • Polk – believed the expansion of slavery a null and void issue – dry climate of southwest not suitable for growing cash crops • Ultimately – he believes slavery will destroy the Democrats & Union

  3. Wilmot Proviso • Originally – Appropriations bill – started in the House --- amendment --- no slavery or involuntary servitude in land acquired through war • Passed in the House – Northern • Rejected --- Senate – balanced • Calhoun Resolution --- • States own the United States • Fed Had no right to make laws in the states or territories

  4. Popular Sovereignty • Allowing citizens to decide for themselves the issue of slavery --- idea of Michigan Senator Lewis Cass • Free Soilers – combination of two groups Northern “Conscience” Whigs & Northern Democrats • Whigs divided – “Cotton” vs “Conscience” • Democrats Divided – Northern vs Southern

  5. Election of 1848 • Cotton Whigs & Southern Dem – nominate Zahary Taylor • Free Soilers – Nominate – Martin Van Buren • Democrats – Lewis Cass • Zachary Taylor wins the Election

  6. California • Slavery brought to the forefront early on in Taylor’s Presidency • 1849 – California Gold Rush – 80,000 people up an went to California – apply for statehood – (popular sovereignty) • 1849 – California applied as a Free State

  7. Great Debate (Southern Position) • 1. slaveholding states would be a minority in the senate • 2. northerners would dominate national politics • 3. threat of secession – • ** need for Compromise --- Henry Clay

  8. Other Issues dealing w/ slavery in Congress • Texas / NM – border --- extend or stop slavery • District of Columbia – slavery in the nation’s capital • Slave trade within the US -- regulate or not

  9. Clay’s Compromise • Offered as a package plan • A. Allow Calif – free state/ organize rest of Mexican cession w/out any restrictions (popular sovereignty) • B. settles border disputes bt/ Texas & NM – favored NM – gov’t acquired Texas’ debts. • Outlawed slave trade in D.C. – did not outlaw slavery itself • Congress would not interfere in domestic slave trade --- enforce a Stiffer Fugitive Slave Act

  10. Results of Compromise • 1. did not pass originally – because it was offered as a package deal • Makeup of Congress Changes • Calhoun Dies of TB • Taylor who opposed Clay’s Compromise – suddenly dies • VP – Millard Filmore now President supports Henry Clay • Webster – states right activist – Sect. of State • Clay – leaves the Senate

  11. Stephen Douglass – 33 yr old devises a plan – offer each idea individually – attain majority support – pass • -Known as Compromise of 1850

  12. Compromise of 1850

  13. VIOLENCE & CRISIS

  14. Uncle Tom’s Cabin • Written by Harrier Beecher Stowe came out (book form) 1852 – sold 300,000 copies • Presented African American as – real people suffering form dreadful circumstances – • It depicted the harshness of the institution of slavery • She was motivated to write this book by the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 – part of 1850 Compromise

  15. Fugitive Slave Act • 1. all fugitives were not entitled to a trial by jury, despite the 6th Amendment – • 2. fugitives could not testify on their own behalf • 3. A statement by the slaveowner describing the escapee was all that was needed to have a slave returned • 4.Federal commissioners that enforced the law – granted $10 only $5 if they were let free • 5. anyone convicted of helping a fugitive – $1,000 fine • 6. anyone could be compelled to help capture runaways – deputize on spot

  16. HarrietBeecherStowe(1811 – 1896) -- So this is the lady who started the Civil War.Abraham Lincoln

  17. Uncle Tom’s Cabin 1852 • Sold 300,000 copies inthe first year. • 2 million in a decade!

  18. Uncle Tom’s Cabin, 1852

  19. Northern Resistance • Frederick Douglass – • Henry David Thoreau • C. The Underground Railroad – well organized system of freeing slaves – transporting them from the south – north. • Conductors • Harriet Tubman • Levi Coffin

  20. Continuing issue of Slavery • As people moved west with the opening of Calif, Oregon and the acquiring of new western territory – people didn’t lose their identity – pro/ anti slavery • One item everybody wanted – Transcontinental Railroad – reduced traveling time to 4 days – • Wagon (months) • Sailing around S. America - month

  21. Problem w/ Transcontinental Railroad • People argued over its starting point • Many southerners favored a starting point in New Orleans --- required the railroad to travel through the northern part of Mexico – • Gadsen Purchase ---$10,000,000 • Douglass – wanted the HUB to be in Chicago – his home state of Illinois – • land west had to be organized into territories/ states • Prepared the Nebraska Bill • Passes in House – repealed in Senate

  22. Sectionalism over the Railroad • Southern Position – if US creates new territories – they should be open to slavery – like the territories acquired by war – if this happens they will agree to railroad beginning in the North • Stephen Douglass – knows that any attempt to repeal compromise – will divide the country

  23. Douglas’ proposal • He proposed the – repeal Missouri Compromise , divide territories in 2 – Kansas -south/ Nebraska - north • Existing Laws • Missouri Compromise – for territories not acquired through war/ states • Compromise of 1850 – popular sovereignty for states acquired through war • ***Passed Congress 1854 – as Kansas/ Nebraska Act

  24. Kansas-Nebraska Act, 1854

  25. I. New Political Parties Emerge • By the end of 1856, the nation’s political landscape had drastically changed • Whigs – split over slavery • Northern Conscience Whigs • Southern Cotton Whigs • Democrats – alive – yet scarred – split over slavery • Northern Democrats • Southern Democrats

  26. A. Slavery Divided Whigs • Founded in 1834 as a reaction to Andrew Jackson – long divided over the issue of slavery • COTTON vs CONSCIENCE • Division – issue over slavery • Widening gap Election of 1852 & Fugitive Slave Act – Conscience Whigs supported Winfield Scott – Cotton whigs supported him to portray the union even though he supported fugitive slave act • Democrat Franklin Pierce won the Election • Final Demise – Kansas Nebraska Act

  27. B. NATIVISM – the favoring of native born people over immigrants • Beliefs – • Feared papal power – growing Catholicism • Resisted the growth of immigrants • Stronger immigration laws • Order of the Star Spangled Banner • Party created by the nativists – aka – American Party or Know Nothing Party • Know Nothing Party -

  28. The “Know-Nothings” [The American Party] • Nativists. • Anti-Catholics. • Anti-immigrants. 1849  Secret Order of the Star-Spangled Banner created in NYC.

  29. II. Anti –Slavery Parties Form • A. Liberty Party – formed in 1844 – platform to pursue the cause of abolition by passing new laws ( effected the election of 1844 bt Clay & Polk) • Free Soil Party – opposed the extension of slavery into the territories • Chose Martin Van Buren in 1848 – failed to win any of the electoral vote – won 10% of popular vote • ** NOT ABOLITIONISTS – objected to ending slavery on economic grounds – did not want slavery to extend

  30. 1852 Presidential Election √Franklin Pierce Gen. Winfield Scott John Parker Hale Democrat Whig Free Soil

  31. 1852Election Results

  32. C. JULY 6 1854 – the Republican party was organized in Jackson, Michigan – • Members • Free soilers • Antislavery democrats • Nativists • Temperance supporters • Beliefs • Opposed the Kansas Nebraska Act • Opposed the spread of slavery

  33. Bleeding Kansas • Situation – Kansas was the first testing/ battling ground for new law “Bleeding Kansas” • 1. March 1855 Kansas had enough to hold an election to establish territorial legislature • David Atchinson • Lecompton Constitution • May 21, 1856 – Sack of Lawrence • Pottawatamie Massacre • Violence in the Senate – “Caning of Charles Sumner”

  34. “Bleeding Kansas” Border “Ruffians”(pro-slavery Missourians)

  35. John Brown: Madman, Hero or Martyr? Mural in the Kansas Capitol buildingby John Steuart Curry (20c)

  36. “The Crime Against Kansas” Sen. Charles Sumner(R-MA) Congr. Preston Brooks(D-SC)

  37. Slavery & Secession

  38. Lecompton Constitution • A. Fall of 1857 – pro-slavery gov’t at Lecompton – wrote a constitution and applied for admission – (slave state) • i. Kansas had 60,000 plus in pop. – however it was 10 to 1 in favor of freesoliers --- • ii. President Buchannon endorsed the Lecompton Constitution • iii. Stephen Douglas – outraged said it was against the Kansas/ Nebraska Act – allowed for popular sovereignty

  39. Douglas persuaded Congress to authorize another referendum on the Lecompton Constitution --- voters rejected the Constitution – Kansas will enter as a Free State – Douglas a hero

  40. Lincoln/ Douglas Debates • 1858 race for Senate in the state of Illinois featured 2 term incumbent Stephen Douglas & former Whig Congressman now Republican Abraham Lincoln. • ** to gain recognition Lincoln challenged Douglas to a series of 7 open air debates

  41. Douglas • “Little Giant” • Stocky and energetic • Spoke with his hands, dramatically, pounding on the podium with fists, pacing dressed in sharp clothes, used impressive language • Beliefs – believed that popular sovereignty was correct method in handling slavery

  42. Stephen Douglas & the Freeport Doctrine PopularSovereignty?

  43. Lincoln • 6’4’’ tall, gangly , wore a stove piped hat, dressed in plain, rumpled clothes, former lawyer, politician, spoke in plain language • Beliefs – believed slavery to be immoral/ “labor system based on greed” he was opposed to the spread of slavery – didn’t expect southerners to give up slavery

  44. 2nd Debate – Freeport, Illinois • Freeport Doctrine – • L – “Could the settlers of a territory vote to exclude slavery before that territory became a state?” (Dredd Scott) • D – Slavery cannot exist a day or an hour anywhere, unless it is supported by local police regulations.” • Douglas will win the Senate, but now some Republicans view Lincoln as an excellent candidate for Presidency.

  45. The Lincoln-Douglas (Illinois Senate)Debates, 1858 A House divided against itself, cannot stand.

  46. 1859 • John Brown had dedicated his life to freeing the slave – leading a rebellion – it was his calling – and he believed the time to be ripe. • October 16, 1859 – led a band of men black/ white into Harper’s Ferry, Va. • Wanted to seize the Federal Arsenal • Distribute arms to slaves • No rebellion occurred – slaves were scared • 8 of Brown’s men killed • Couple of Days later – Col. Robert E. Lee killed 2 more men and captured Brown and his surviving men • Brown was hanged December 2, 1859

  47. John Brown’s Raidon Harper’s Ferry, 1859

  48. Lincoln is Elected President • A. Republican Convention – took place in Chicago, 1860 at the Wigwam Hotel • Seaward • Credentials of having led antislavery forces in Congress • Financial backing • Desire to be center of attention • Well known name

  49. However he did not get the nomination • Republicans went with Lincoln – unknown name and had not offended any republicans • To the southerners he was known as the ‘black Republican”

  50. Election of 1860 • Northern Democrats – Stephen Douglas • Southern Democrats – John C. Breckenridge • KK and Whigs – John Bell • Republicans – Abraham Lincoln • Lincoln won the Election – Sectional Support • 1.9 million – 2.8million votes • 180 – 123 in the E.C. • Never appeared on a ballot in most of the slave states

More Related